Afghan people gather along a road as they wait to board a U S military aircraft to leave the country, at a military airport in Kabul on August 20, 2021 days after Taliban's military takeover of Afghanistan. (Photo by Wakil KOHSAR / AFP) (Photo by WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP via Getty Images)
Watch chaos unfold at Kabul airport's north gate
02:11 - Source: CNN
CNN  — 

Afghans are witnessing early glimpses of the true nature of Taliban rule, after the brutal repression of several protests and the murder of a journalist’s relative betrayed the militant group’s promises to lead an “inclusive” and restrained regime.

The German news organization Deutsche Welle (DW) said in an article on Thursday that Taliban fighters had been searching for one of its journalists in Afghanistan, confirming that a relative of the journalist was shot dead by the Taliban on Wednesday and one other person was seriously injured.

Other relatives were able to escape at the last minute and are on the run, the DW article said.

“The killing of a close relative of one of our editors by the Taliban yesterday is inconceivably tragic, and testifies to the acute danger in which all our employees and their families in Afghanistan find themselves,” DW Director General Peter Limbourg said in the article.

“It is evident that the Taliban are already carrying out organized searches for journalists, both in Kabul and in the provinces. We are running out of time!” Limburg added.

The news comes after a threat assessment, prepared for the United Nations by a Norwegian organization, warned the “Taliban are intensifying the hunt-down of all individuals and collaborators with the former regime, and if unsuccessful, target and arrest the families and punish them according to their own interpretation of Sharia law.”

“Particularly at risk are individuals in central positions in military, police and investigative units,” the report went on to say.

Taliban fighters patrol in Kabul on Thursday.

CNN has obtained a copy of the report, dated August 18 and written by the Norwegian Center for Global Analyses. It includes a document purportedly written by the Taliban’s Military Commission to a senior security official in the former government who – it said – had “excellent relations with the Americans and the British.”

The document, dated August 16, said he must report to the Commission and failure to do so would mean that “your family members will be arrested instead, and you are responsible for this.”

CNN has been unable to establish the extent of the Taliban’s search for members of the security services and others associated with the former government, nor how many may have been arrested.

Elsewhere on Thursday, the Taliban published a series of photographs of their fighters at an Independence Day parade brandishing US assault weapons.

The parade took place in the city of Qalat, the capital of Zabul province, on Thursday. The photographs show a Taliban unit carrying M4 carbines, which were supplied by the US to Afghan forces in recent years.

A similar parade was held in Kandahar in the south.

In seizing military bases across Afghanistan, the Taliban captured huge stocks of weapons and vehicles, including modern mine-resistant vehicles (MRAPs) and Humvees. Fighters have also been seen patrolling with US M16 rifles in recent days.

The last flights from Kabul inch closer

Taliban spokespeople have spent much of the past week stressing that the group will run a more tolerant regime than the one that repressed millions when last in power until it was ousted by US-led forces in 2001.

The spokesman for the Taliban’s political office in Doha, Suhail Shaheen, told CNN on Monday the group is committed to an “inclusive Islamic government,” and repeated assurances that those involved with the Afghan state over the past two decades would be given amnesty.

But a pattern of repression has already emerged in towns and cities around Afghanistan. On Thursday, the country’s independence day, Taliban patrols circled Kabul, blasting sirens and following marches that displayed the Afghan national flag.

And in the provinces, which sit mostly away from the glare of international media, militants have fired guns and beaten protesters who removed the Taliban’s flag from town squares.

CNN's Clarissa Ward reports Kabul's Hamid Karzai International Airport as thousands of people try to evacuate Afghanistan as the Taliban consolidate their control.
Clarissa Ward at Kabul airport: It's very hard being an American here
07:43 - Source: CNN

The clampdowns are particularly concerning given the looming departure of the last US troops from Afghanistan. Those forces have been securing the military side of Kabul’s airport, and once they leave, the last chance to escape the country could vanish for the thousands who have crowded the facility all week.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said there has been “no decision to change” the August 31 deadline to withdraw all US troops from Afghanistan. If such a decision is made, it would require further discussions with the Taliban, Kirby said.

The scene at Kabul’s international airport has grown more desperate and chaotic as the week has worn on. On Thursday, crowds outside swelled and multiple Afghans told CNN they had been refused passage through Taliban checkpoints despite having the correct paperwork.

Evacuation efforts were hampered on Friday due to Qatar – where many of the US government evacuation flights had been traveling to – nearing capacity for sheltering Afghans, a Qatari source told CNN.

This means around 10,000 people who have been processed have not been able to depart from Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport, a soldier told CNN.

The Pentagon said later on Friday that flights resumed after a six-to-seven hour pause.

As the US government sought new locations to house evacuees, Army Maj. Gen. Hank Taylor, deputy director of the Joint Staff for Regional Operations, told reporters Friday that some flights were being directed to Germany. He added that 17 flights have left the airport in the past 24 hours carrying 6,000 passengers.

Air Force Senior Master Sgt. Stacia Zachary told CNN that the first few military evacuation flights from Afghanistan have landed at Ramstein Air Base in Germany, carrying about 350 passengers, some of them Afghan nationals.

The base is just a temporary stop for the passengers, Zachary explained.

State Department spokesman Ned Price said Bahrain, Denmark, Germany, Italy, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Qatar, Tajikistan, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom and Uzbekistan have been or soon will transit Americans and others through.

Biden stands by decision to withdraw

The chaos has placed President Joe Biden’s administration under intense scrutiny, after Biden stood by his unapologetic stance on the decision to withdraw US troops.

Biden said on Friday there would be “plenty of time to criticize and second guess” his administration’s actions in Afghanistan when the evacuation operation is complete, but for now he is “focused on getting this job done.” He also committed to evacuating Afghans who had assisted the US in the war effort.

He added that there has been “no questions” from allies over the US credibility on the world stage and said that a G7 meeting is being convened next week to coordinate a “united approach.”

In the meantime, images, videos and stories from outside the airport continue to rattle observers.

A US citizen who was born in Afghanistan and doesn’t wish to be named for safety reasons told CNN it has been impossible to make it to the airport.

He said he had a pass to the airport and tried for “long hours” to reach different gates but the Taliban and the Afghan special forces “have very unhuman and extremely threatening attitudes.”

He said he witnessed guards creating chaos through erratic shootings and allowing some of the people they wanted to enter the gates.

“I saw many Afghans brandishing their foreign passports to the guards who initially paid no heed to their plight,” he said.

Even the passes that are issued to US citizens indicate that the US cannot “ensure safe passage” to its citizens, he added.

“This means that despite risking being beaten, pushed away, stampeded or worse by the Taliban or the Afghan special forces at the gates, you are still not guaranteed a safe passage through them,” he told CNN.

On Thursday, Afghanistan’s General Directorate of Body and Sports confirmed that a teenager on Afghanistan’s youth national football team was one of the victims who fell from a US military C-17 aircraft on Monday.

“With great regret and sadness, we obtained information that Zaki Anwari, one of the youth footballers of the national team, has lost his life in a horrible incident,” it said in a statement.

Anwari was “endeavoring to leave the country like hundreds other youth from his country,” it continued. “He has fallen down from the US military plane and lost his life.”

CNN’s Kylie Atwood, Jennifer Hansler Jane Nix, Claudia Rebaza and Barbara Starr contributed reporting